Style and Meaning
Studies in the Detailed Analysis of Film
Manchester University Press
Published on 1. March 2005
Book
Hardback
264 pages
978-0-7190-6524-8 (ISBN)
Description
Approaches to the detailed analysis of film and related questions about interpretations and value are once again being widely debated in film studies. Style and meaning is the first edited collection for many years to focus on these matters. The essays - which include contributions by established film scholars (such as George M. Wilson, V. F. Perkins and Laura Mulvey) and by younger writers in the field - centre on methods of close analysis and ground their discussion in the detail of individual films.
With a common focus on the choices made by filmmakers, the writers explores different aspects of the relationship between textual detail and broader conceptual frameworks. Some chapters examine individual aspects of filmmaking - the long take, cinematography, space and point of view, unreliable narration. Others take up different kinds of questions which are equally crucial to textual analysis and interpretation, including: meaning and value; emotional response; the concept of 'the fictional world'; new technologies and film analysis. The selection of films has been made to reflect not only those areas of film history which traditionally been explored through mise-en-scene criticism, but also areas such as the avant-garde and television drama which have not tended to receives such detailed investigation. In these ways the book conducts a series of dialogues with issues in film study which are specifically provoked by close analysis.
Style and meaning is an important new initiative in the varied literature of film studies. its highly readable collection of analyses and variety of approaches will prove popular on undergraduate courses while providing an invaluable resource for graduate students and teachers of film and media. -- .
With a common focus on the choices made by filmmakers, the writers explores different aspects of the relationship between textual detail and broader conceptual frameworks. Some chapters examine individual aspects of filmmaking - the long take, cinematography, space and point of view, unreliable narration. Others take up different kinds of questions which are equally crucial to textual analysis and interpretation, including: meaning and value; emotional response; the concept of 'the fictional world'; new technologies and film analysis. The selection of films has been made to reflect not only those areas of film history which traditionally been explored through mise-en-scene criticism, but also areas such as the avant-garde and television drama which have not tended to receives such detailed investigation. In these ways the book conducts a series of dialogues with issues in film study which are specifically provoked by close analysis.
Style and meaning is an important new initiative in the varied literature of film studies. its highly readable collection of analyses and variety of approaches will prove popular on undergraduate courses while providing an invaluable resource for graduate students and teachers of film and media. -- .
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Manchester
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-7190-6524-8 (9780719065248)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
John Gibbs is Senior Lecturer in Film at the University of Reading
Content
Introduction - John Gibbs and Douglas Pye; 1. Where is the world?: The horizon of events in movie fiction - V.F. Perkins; 2. From detail to meaning: Badlands (Terence Malick, 1973) and cinematic articulation - Jonathan Bignell; 3. Narrative and visual pleasures in The Scarlet Empress (Josef von Sternberg, 1934) - George M. Wilson; 4. The dandy and the magdalen: Interpreting the long take in Hitchcock's Under Capricorn (1949) - Ed Gallafent; 5. Character interiority: Space, point of view and performance in Hitchcock's Vertigo (1958) - Neill Potts; 6. Narration, point of view and patterns in the soundtrack of Letter From An Unknown Woman (Max Ophuls, 1948) - Steve Neale; 7. Revisiting Preminger: Bonjour Tristesse and close reading - John Gibbs and Douglas Pye; 8. Meaning and value in The Jazz Singer (Alan Crosland, 1927) - Corin Willis; 9. A Hollywood art film: Liebestraum (Mike Figgis, 1991) - Michael Walker; 10. Swimming and sinking: Form and meaning in an avant garde film - Jim Hillier; 11. 'Knowing one's place': Frame-breaking, embarrassment and irony in La Ceremonie (Claude Chabrol, 1995) - Deborah Thomas; 12. 'Television aesthetics' and close analysis: style, mood and engagement in Perfect Strangers (Stephen Poliakoff, 2001) - Sarah Cardwell; 13. How cinematography creates meaning in Happy Together (Wong Kar-Wai, 1997) - Cathy Greenhalgh; 14. Notes on teaching film style - Andrew Klevan; 15. Repetition and return: Textual analysis and Douglas Sirk in the twenty-first century - Laura; Mulvey; Index